OCR Text |
Show E4 ICAH 2. The ftate of being healed, or fkinne over The firft ftage of healing, or the difcharge o matter, is called digeftion ; the fecond, or the fill ing up with fleth, incarnation; and the laft, o {klfinn'mg over, cicatrization Sharp's Surgery 7oCr'caTtrizE. . 4. [from cicatrix. 1. To apply fuch medicines to wounds or ulcers, as heal and fkin them over Quincy 2, To heal and induce the fkin over a fore W incarned and in a few days cicatrized i \\;Ith a2 fmooth cicatrix Wifenan on Fumours Cricery. n /i [myrrhis. CicuoOrRA CEOUS adj A fort of herb [fro cichorium Lat.] Having the qualities of fuccory Diureticks evacuate the falt feram; as all aci diureticks, an ceous ,plants th Cicu'-PrasE teftaceou . To CECURATR tame t an bitter cichora Floyer [cicer. v reclai A plant [cicuro, Lat. fro T wildnefs ; t make tame and tradable Poifons may yet retain fome portion of thei naturesj yet are f{o refracted, cicurated, and fubdued, as not to make good their deftruéive malignities Brown's Vulgar Errours Cicura'rion. n /. [from cicurate.] Th a&t of taming or reclaiming from wildnefs This holds not only in domeftick and manfuet birds, for then it might be the effe of cicuratio _orinftitution; butin the wild. Ray on the Creation CI'DER. n. /. [cidre, Fr. JSidra, Ttal. ficera Ea Tinépe, mw 1. All kind of ftrong liquors, except wine This fenfe is now wholly obfolete 2. Liquor made of the juice of fruit prefled W had alfo drink, wholefom and good win of the grape, a kind of cider made of a fruit of tha country 5 a wonderful pleafing and refrethin drink. Bacon 3. The juice of apples exprefled and fermented. 'This 1s now the fenfe To the utmoft bounds of thi ‘Wide univerfe Silurian cider born _Shall pleafe all taftes, and triumph o'er the vine Ci'pERIST - of cider %, /. [from cider. When the cideriffs have take Philips A make care for the bef "fruit, and ordered them after the beft manner the could, yet hath their cider generally proved pale tharp, and ill tafted €1'perKIN Mortimer 2 /. [from cider. A low word ufed for the liguor' made of the mur or grofs matter of apples, after the cider is prefie out, and a convenient quantity of boiled wate added to it; the whole infufing for about forty- ~eight hours Phillips's World of Words Ciderkin is made for common drinking, and fupplies the place of finall beer Mortimer CieLinG n / See CeiLInG CIERGE. n. /. [French. A candle carried in proceflions Cr'riary. adj. [cilium, Lat.] Belongin to the eyelids Th ciliary procefies or rather the ligaments . ~obferved in the infide of the fclerotick tunicles o the eye, do ferve inftead of a mufcle, by the con traction, to alter the figure of the eye Ry on the Cregtion Civi'ciovs. adj. [from cilicium cloth, Lat.] Made of hair garmen of camel' Ci1 hair tha is hair mad o fome texture of that hair; a coarfe garment, eilicious or fackeloth habit, fuitable to the aufterit of his life Biowi's Vulgar Errours Cima'r. See Simar CiME'LIARCH. # /. [from xespmhiegXnc- The chief keepe of plate, v_efiments and things of value to belongin Dié& SBan. an church; a church-warden Ci'METER. 2. [0 [cimitarra Portug. from chimeteir, Turkifbn BluA fort o tear's Portuguefe Diftionary. {fword ufed by the Turks, (hort, heavx and recurvated, or bent backward. Thi word is fometimes erroneoufly fpelt /c:mitar, and feymiter 3 as in the followin examples By this feimitar That flew the fophy and a Perfian prince That wor three fields of fultan Solyman. ShaZefp Our armours now may ruft, our idle feymiter Dryden Hang by our fides for ornament, not ufe Ci'NcTURE n. [ [cindura, Lat. Now happy he, whofe cloak and cinétar Shakefpeare Hold out this tempeft Columbus found th' American fo gir With feather'd cinéfure, naked elfe, and wild Milton He binds the facred cinéfure rownd his breatt Pope z. An inclofure The court and prifon being within the cinffur Bacon's Henry V1I of one wall A ring or lift at th top and bottom of the fhaft of a column feparating the fhaftat one end from th bafe, at the other from the capital. Iti fuppofed to be in imitation of the girth or ferrils anciently ufed to ftrengthe and preferve the primitive wood co lumns CI'NDER Lat. Chambers #. /. [ecindre, Fr. from cineres 1. A mafs ignited and quenched, withou being reduced to athes I fhould make very forges of my cheeks That would to cinders burn up modefty Did but I fpeak thy deeds Shakefpeare There is in fmiths cinders, by fome adhefion o iron, fometimes to be found a magnetical operation Browan So fnow on ZEtna does unmelted lie Waller 2. A hot coal that has ceafed to flame If from adown the hopeful chop The fat upon a cinder drops To ftinking fmoke it turns the flame {CiNDER-WENCH. ) 7 Swift [cinder and avo CINDER-WOMAN. § man.] A womanwhof trade is to rake in heaps of afhes fo cinders *T'is under fo much nafty rubbith laid To find it out's the cinder-qvoman's trade. E/fJay on Satire Sh ha abov fiv hundre fuit of fin cloaths, and yet went abroad like a cinder-vench Arbuthnot's Hiftory of Fobn Bull In the black form of cinder-qvench the came Whe love, the hour thame the plac ha banifh' Gay CINERA'TION. #. /. [from cineres, Lat. The reduétion of .any thing by fire t afhes. A term of chymiftry Cineri'rrovs adj [ cinericius tious cinnabar is called vermilion Cinnabar is the ore out of which quickfilve ; drawn, and confifts partly of a mercuriy an partly of a fuIphdreo-ochr;;o;xsdmatter oodward' The particles of mercury uniting ;figflt}g{f_ ticles of fulphur, compofe cinnabar, Newton':o‘p; CiNNABAR of Antimony, is made of mer cury, {ulphur, and erude antimony Cr'nw aMoN. . /. [ cinnamomum, Lat.] Th fragrant bark of a low tree in the iflay of Ceylon Its leaves refemble thof o the olive, both as to fubftance and ¢, lour. = The fruit refembles an acor o -olive, and has neither the {mell nor taft When boiled.in water, i yields an oil, which, as it cools an hardens, becomes as firm and whit tallow ; the fmell of which is agreeabl in candles The cinnamon of the an cients was different from ours. Chanj Let Araby extol her happy coaft Her cinnamon and fweet amomum boaft CinNamo Dryden's Fablr Water is made by diftillin the bark, firft infufed in barley water in {pirit of wine or white wine. Chanb CINQUE. n. /. [French.] A five, Iti ufed in games alone ; but is often compounded with other words CiNQUE-FOIL. 7. [ [cingue feuille, Fr. A kind of five-leaved clover CiNQUE-PACE. 2 [ [cinque pas, Fr.] kind of grave dance Wooing, wedding, and repenting, is a Scotc jig, a meafure, and a cingue-pace. The firft fuit i hot and hatty, like a Scotch jig, and full as fantaftical; the wedding, mannerly and modeft, as meafure full of fate and gravity; and then come repentance, and, with his bad legs, falls into th cingue-pace fafter and fafter, till he finks into hi { Shakefpeare CINQUE-PORTS. 7. /i [cingue ports, Fr. grave Thof haven tha lie toward France, an therefore have been thought by our Kings to b ‘Whofe rolling flames and fcatter'd cinders fly CrnNaBAR. u. [ [cinnabaris, Lat.] Cin nabar is native or factitious: tha fadt of the bark 1. Something worn round the body 3. [In architecture. Ci'~eve. u /. [from cingulum, Tt irth for a horfe Lat. Having the form or ftate of afhes The nerves arife from the glands of the cineritions part of the brain, and are terminated in al parte of the body Cheyne Ciwe'RULENT. adj. [from cineres, Lat. Full of afhes Did fuch as ought moft vigilantly to be obferved againf invafion In whic refpe, the places where the are have a fpecial governour or keeper, called b his office Lord Warden of the cingue ports an divers privileges granted to them, as a particula q jurifdi&ion their warden having the authority o an admiral amon his own name them, and fending out writs i The cingue ports are Dover, Sand wich, Rye, Haftings, Winchelfea, Rumney, an Hithe; fome of which, as the number e.xce.ed five, muft either be added to the firft inftitutio by fome later grant, or accounted as appendant to fome of the reft They, that bea Cowdl The cloth of ftate above her, are four paron Of the cingue ports Shakefpeart C1NQUE-SPOTTED. adj. Having five{pots A mole, cingu On her left breafl: fpotted, like the crimfon drop REhe botton?x ot[]:x cow,flip Shakgpeare Cr'on. a. [ [ fion, or feion, F rench. 1. A fprout ; a fhoot from a plant We have reafon to cool our! raging motions, o]l(l ta f e e w ts lu carmal ftings, our unbitte Shak this, thdt you call love, to be a fec ot cion. The fately Caledonian oak, newly fettlei d triumphant throne, begirt with cigrs of his °w; royal ftem How‘ 2. The fhoot engrafted or inferted on fiock Th |